Thursday, November 5, 2009
Is That Smell Coming From Me?
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The Namibia SHE knows
- is a place where children walk miles through rain, piercing sun, and soaring temperatures to get to school.
- is a place where people always say good morning.
- is a place where children who have nothing are happy and joyful.
- is a place where mothers are superwomen.
- is a place where people live in the moment, in the day.
- is a place where family is central to life.
- is a place where zebras, elephants and lions roam free
- is a place where people take the time to know and help their neighbors.
- is a place where friends are welcomed like family.
- is a place where grandparents, aunts, uncles, and even strangers take in orphaned children.
- is a place where villagers greet health workers with smiles and waves.
- is a place where children recognize and are thankful for the small things.
- is a place where there is no shortage of smiles and laughter.
- is a place where clear nights bring skies filled with a million sparkling stars
- is a place where children take care of their ailing parents and siblings
- is a place where the elderly are valued for their experience and knowledge.
- is a place where parents dream of better lives for their children and try to make that happen.
Namibia is also….
- a place where children go to bed hungry.
- a place where alcoholism is an epidemic and men spend their family’s money on beer.
- a place where nearly 1 in 4 adults (15-49) is infected with HIV/AIDS.
- a place where teenage pregnancy is extremely common.
- a place where only primary education is free.
- a place where women have little power in relationships.
- a place where rape is common.
- a place where poverty is the norm and % of people survive on less than $2/day.
- a place where few people have more than secondary education.
- a place where orphans and other vulnerable children are turned away from school because they cannot pay for fees or uniforms.
- a place where funerals, especially of young people, are too plentiful.
- a place where hundreds of people are made homeless each year by flooding.
- a place where 40% of people are unemployed
- a place that has the highest income gap in the world.
Monday, October 19, 2009
T.I.N. (This is Namibia)
All Hail Florida, Hail!
To Windhoek or Bust...
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Playing Catch Up
I was given a puppy, Kavango and I passed him onto another volunteer with the promise that they will come see me a lot. Two kittens will move in with me soon!! I am currently living with out any appliances, but I do have a bed!! My Gator flag is flying on the wall so when you walk in it is the first thing you see!! I have warm running water and yellow curtains in my room... what more could a girl want! Some of the volunteers in the town are going to come over to my house for our Wed night dinner, well they are cooking at their house we are just going to hang out and eat the finished product at mine.
RECONNECT:
This was awesome... Our group (20 volunteers) were all together for the first time since swearing in. It was great to see everyone. We spent a lot of time just hanging out or watching movies and sharing some of the crazy things that have happened to us while we are at site. This was a great prelude to the real vacation just relaxing and enjoying some time with great people
PART 1: Kasane, Botswana – Chobe National Park
We started out going to Kasane in Botswana. We arrived around 11 o’clock in the morning and checked into our campsite (PS this was my first REAL camping trip, not Balaguer style with a TV and vacuum). We booked our 5:45 am game drive for the next day and the sunset boat cruise and then we went to a nice lodge and had a good margarita before we went back to the camp and cooked dinner. It was a good night with some good liquor…note to travelers: don’t start out the trip my mixing your cocktail in your Nalgene bottle… the smell of rum and coke just does not want to come outThis picture does not do it justice either. In fact none of these do it was one of the most beautiful, serene things I have ever seen!
We did not get too much time in Botswana I think we were really excited about Livingstone so we just spent our extra time chilling at the pool.So in my time here I have learned that I tend to “jump to conclusions” as Nick and Clay like to point out to me. I just start doing something right away or assume something… yeah sounds about right. Well on the last night in Kasane, Botswana we had to go to the store to get food and beer. They sent me to get the beer (BIG MISTAKE) they told me to get enough for 5 people for one night. I come out $300 later with 48 beers!! In my head I was thinking that we could just finish them through the week not thinking we are going through two borders (Namibia and Zambia!) Well it is not too funny when I write it down but it was pretty dang funny while I was sitting with 48 beers on my lap in the car. Lesson: Kim plans ALL the parties!! PS- We drank 9 beers that night, but come Friday afternoon they were all gone!!
PART 2: Livingstone, Zambia- Victoria Falls
We got to Livingstone on Wed morning, checked into our hostel, Jollyboys backpackers (AMAZING!!) and we decided since we weren’t going to go rafting until the next day we should go see the falls. The guy at the desk told us to hike to the Boiling Pot and see…Supposed to be a great view. We go thinking that we will have a small hike and see a pretty view… we hiked to the bottom of the Gorge!! I was not ready for this I was wearing a sundress and my reefs!! On the way down the thong of my flip flop broke so I finished the hike down and the killer hike up barefoot. This is what we hiked over after the hike down the gorge!! This is also the exact spot that we jumped in the next day for our rafting adventure“Go Hard or Go Home”
On Thursday, Nick, Jess, Ashley and I decided to go White water rafting down the Zambezi. We had perfect timing since the first half (the hard part) opened on Monday and we rafted on Thurs!This might have been a crazy idea especially because we were rafting Class 5 rapids (Class 6 is considered commercial suicide). IT WAS SO MUCH FUN!!! We had the four of us and one brit and one irish guy plus our guide, Steve. Steve was a drill Sgt. For sure. He went down the one class 6 rapid by himself, head first in our raft while we walked around it (on the Zimbabwe side). He also told us the week before he was going down and showed us the rock where he hit and got his front tooth knocked out!! When we got in the raft I asked if he was a go for it guy and he told me his favorite motto was “go hard or go home” so the whole day we were the first to go down and he made sure to take us on the hardest path.
The scenery was beautiful there was a lot of down time the second half of the day to relax the harder rapids were in the morning before lunch.
I will leave you with this one story (as told by a rafting guide):
There were two Japanese tourists who took the rafting trip. They could not speak very good English so the guide put them in the middle behind two Brits. He told the Japanese tourists to do whatever the Brits did (ie paddle forward, get down, etc.). They came up on one rapid and it knocked the two Brits out and the next thing the guide saw was the two Japanese JUMPING out of the boat!!! Silly Tourists!!!
So that is pretty much vacation. GOOD TIMES will have to do that again.
!
Monday, June 1, 2009
Getting to Know the Town
This weekend was a lot of fun but its nice to know that tonight when I get off work I will be able to go home and relax. I have been working with a group of learners and this week is when the program actually starts so it will be fun and interesting to see how it goes. My job is working with kids at an after school program to give them a place to go. One of the problems here is that there is not much on the entertainment side. Most people just sit in their homestead and drink. The kids do what they can but when they are not helping their parents cook dinner they have nothing to do but entertain themselves.
I will try and paint a picture of most of the kids homes that I work with...
They live in a home stay which is a cluster of mud huts if they are lucky they have a boar hole which means they do not have to walk to the river to get water. Usually this is divided by women on one side men on the other. The kitchen in on the women's side. They have to walk 30 minutes to school everyday where they are in class from 730 until 1pm. They usually have porridge to eat. Porridge is a traditional meal made of maize meal and water that you cook over a fire. There is not much taste or nutritional value to it, but it fills you up and gets the job done. During school the kids are taught in English,their second language, which they barely understand but they try. When they get out of school they will either go home or try to do something to keep themselves busy. It is hard to have a ball to play with 1. because they are expensive 2. they pop because of the thorns and broken glass everywhere. So they take plastic bags and make a small baseball size ball and play with that. They have to get their homework done before it gets dark because a lot of people do not have electricity. They come home and if there is enough food the kids will get a meal. In the culture it is respectful for the older people to eat and if there is not enough for the kids they will not eat. A lot of people have dogs, but not like we do. They are there more for protection not companionship. There are dogs everywhere!
I live in a town so it is different for me, we have modern amenities like grocery stores and electricity, but there is still a lot of development that could be done. We have two tar roads in town and the rest are sand.
This weekend a lot of volunteers came in town from all the groups to prepare for a conference I am helping with. It was also a volunteer from my groups birthday so we spent Saturday at the Omashare Lodge having a cool drink and relaxing by the pool then watched the sunset over the Kavango River and went home and made a yummy birthday dinner. It was very nice and I enjoyed getting together with them. I am starting to forget how to talk. Since English is most peoples second language I have to talk slow and short. This is very hard for me but I am getting better at explaining what words mean to a lot of people. The shorter the better.
I am starting to get to know people. The other day I was walking around town and I got stopped by a few people just to say hello. It is different living in the town because we have a lot of people come in from the villages especially at the end of the month (pay day) so when I see someone they are usually family, a teacher, or another volunteer. It is a great feeling when you walk down the street and you hear your name and turn around and someone recognizes you... makes you feel more like your at home! I have a great support from the volunteers who are here also most of them have been here for over a year so they are really used to a lot of things and help me understand and feel more comfortable.
The search for my permanent housing is still going hopefully it will happen soon so I can be sure I have a place to live for the next two years.
